Subjective sound assessment1) It's slightly louder than the AC NV Silencer I had previously.
2) It's slightly louder than the single Yate Loon D12SL-12 at 1200 rpm
3) It's much quieter than my suspended Seagate 3.5" HD's seeks.
4) Its noise is characterized by a soft whoosh - sounds like mainly air turbulence.
5) I completely forget about the noise while gaming - it's not obtrusive at all.
6) The coil whine (or whatever) in my wireless router is more annoying than the 8800GT.

My 400W PSU with an advertised 28A (combined) from the 12V rails has no problem powering the card. This doesn't surprise me, though.

Oh and what kind of 400W PSU are you running? It must be a good make in order to power that system.

P.S. I think it's time to update your sig...it's a good feeling though!

Hah! I actually just updated the sig to include the 8800GT.

My PSU is a FSP Green PS FSP400-60GLN. To be honest, I was a little worried about it. But the highest power draw I've seen so far from the whole system is 178 watts (per kill-a-watt meter). I'm not worried yet.

Anyone who has purchased and received this card within the past couple of weeks: would you please run "nvflash --check" and post the output, or PM me with it? This is using nvflash v5.57, which you can download from just about anywhere. The output should only be a couple lines of text.

I really need to know the details of the flash chip used for the BIOS. Note that I am asking for the info on the chip itself, not the BIOS loaded on it. Thank you!

Speaking of bottlenecks.. I had a X2 4600+ and when I received my 8800GTS and ran 3dmark twice (I couldn't believe the result on the first time) I went straight to the store and bought E6750+mobo. I didn't bother testing the FPS on any real games, but I'd imagine it shows there as well. And someone's on 3000+? Oh god.

Speaking of bottlenecks.. I had a X2 4600+ and when I received my 8800GTS and ran 3dmark twice (I couldn't believe the result on the first time) I went straight to the store and bought E6750+mobo. I didn't bother testing the FPS on any real games, but I'd imagine it shows there as well. And someone's on 3000+? Oh god.

I think the score was around 8500 on AMD-setup and 11000+ on Intel.

Yeah, my 3000+ is getting a little long in the tooth. I'm waiting for E8400 prices to fall down to MSRP, and then I'm building a new mATX system to replace most of this one. But I can assure you, my upgrade won't be based on meaningless 3DMark scores.

Sorry to sound cliche, but I don't play 3DMark - I play games. I'm sure you're satisfied with your MB/CPU upgrade, but you really ought to read up on CPU bottlenecking with modern games. Start with this discussion in the HardForum. And check out the article linked in there. Basically, almost everything is GPU-dependent at common resolutions. Look at the FPS scores at 1600x & 1920x resolutions - they're roughly identical with either the 4000+ or the C2DXE X6800 with the same GPU - the CPU doesn't matter at meaningful resolutions.

The problem with 3DMark is that it has no real-world context. It's scoring system doesn't tell us how a computer will perform in any real application. As such, it's meaningless outside of comparisons with itself. Actually I guess it's good for inducing upgrade psychosis. Conspiracy!

Subjective sound assessment1) It's slightly louder than the AC NV Silencer I had previously.2) It's slightly louder than the single Yate Loon D12SL-12 at 1200 rpm3) It's much quieter than my suspended Seagate 3.5" HD's seeks.4) Its noise is characterized by a soft whoosh - sounds like mainly air turbulence.5) I completely forget about the noise while gaming - it's not obtrusive at all.6) The coil whine (or whatever) in my wireless router is more annoying than the 8800GT.

nice work Jay

i've just had my friend to order 1 for me yesterday, after seeing the benchmark result of 9600GTs - overclocked 9600GT barely beat stock 8800GT, and this card is priced cheaper than factory overclocked 9600GT.

the heatsink looks indeed quite high quality with large contact area. i might be able to retro fit a 120 mm fan on top of it.

have you tried further overclocking it? i'm wondering how well it holds at 700+/2000+ core/ram and temperature/noise at that setting.

have you tried further overclocking it? i'm wondering how well it holds at 700+/2000+ core/ram and temperature/noise at that setting.

No overclocking yet. I'm a little hesitant with this card - only a 3 year warranty from MSI, and I need to make this thing last. I don't like to upgrade often. But there's tons of reviews on Newegg for this card now, and I remember seeing some specifically mention overclocking. My guess is that max clocks will vary chip to chip. If 700/2000 are average for other 8800GT's, I see no reason why this card couldn't hit those speeds.

Also, Newegg's price has increased again - it's now $219 AR.

thagomizer wrote:

Yes, NVFLASH.EXE needs to be run after booting directly into DOS -- sorry I didn't mention this earlier.

reviews on newegg are mostly positive, only problem mentioned (several times) is the fan would hit the clear plastic cover if speed up and most ppl just simply remove it (as seen in your pictures), comment in the "cons" are actually quite funny "it's not free?", "it doesn't print money?" heh.

i'll have to wait the card to arrive at my friend's place in seattle then usps mail to new zealand. i'll post an update in this thread once i get to play with it.

I have removed the entire plastic shroud. I believe the Newegg reviewers who talk about removing stuff are referring to the extra plastic ring screwed to the shroud. Here's the underside of the shroud:
The 4 circled screws and two built-in clips keep that darker plastic ring on. I believe it is this second ring that rubs against the fan blades. But again, I just removed the whole thing, so I'm not totally sure.

I have no plans for a shroud mod, but you're piqued my curiosity - what exactly do you have in mind? My next build is going to employ a mATX MB and an Antec NSK 3480. Because I'll be switching cases soon, I don't want to get too crazy.

I really want to get the PC off the floor, but my current tower is a little too, well, tower-looking for on the desktop. I've also considered just screwing everything to the back of my desk, or in a drawer - going for the "no PC" look. Or sticking the whole ugly mess in a closet and running longer cables.

Tonight I got Ubuntu 7.10 (I dual boot XP) updated and working with the new 8800GT - what a pain in the ass. The restricted drivers manager wanted to overwrite the new nvidia driver after each reboot, dumping me into safe graphics mode. You actually have to blacklist the built-in nv driver. Credit to this UbuntuGeek.com thread for helping me through this headache.

Also running Ubuntu/XP(just for games) dual boot. Noticed that guide is for Fiesty, hopefully things are smoother with Gutsy. I usually use Envy to do my nvidia install and xorg.conf configurations anyways, it hasn't failed me yet.

Also running Ubuntu/XP(just for games) dual boot. Noticed that guide is for Fiesty, hopefully things are smoother with Gutsy. I usually use Envy to do my nvidia install and xorg.conf configurations anyways, it hasn't failed me yet.

Although the guide is for Feisty, I am also on Gutsy (7.10) and had trouble. I think that the problem is related to the restricted driver manager. If you have never enabled it, you might be safe. I used it with my 6800GS and had zero problems, but it wouldn't work with the new 8800GT. Probably because the driver used by the restricted driver manager is too old to support the (relatively) new 8800GT. Even if Envy installs the latest nVidia driver, is the restricted driver manager continues to hijack upon reboot, you'll have trouble.

169.09 is what I installed manually. Does Envy also install the nVidia control panel (or whatever it's called)? The restricted driver manager didn't, but manual installation did. I believe Envy is just a script that automates manual driver install, so it probably does.

Re: heat sinks on memory. I don't think this is a big deal, especially since there's a fan blowing air across them. When ram is rated for a certain speed, is it rated with heat sinks? Probably not, I suspect. The heat sinks are probably more important as we exceed manufacturer specs. This is my guess - if you or anyone know otherwise, I'm all ears.

Removed the shroud/cover which worked to make it quieter and didn't change temperature enough to notice

Even though the GPU temp is 13c cooler idling than my 7300GS w/ Zalman fanless my temps have gone up all around inside the case w/ all the other components. I've noticed the backside (especially where the soder is) gets extremely hot to touch which I assume is increasing the ambient temp (the heatsink doesn't feel any hotter than the one on my last card)

it's rather quiet to be put in a game pc, i could barely hear it over my cpu fan. core temp was a little over 60'C @ 700/1000 running atitool.

my only game installed is wow, which doesn't seem to appreciate the upgrade much, it shows a little improvement over my 7950GT. 3dmark 06 scored 11064 out of box @ 660/950, 11310 @700/1000, i better run 7950GT again tonight for some comparison.

not sure what's acting up, i played a little with atitool n rivatuner last night after some 3dmark and tweaking i did a reboot, then my computer would halt during POST - after 6 to 9 seconds it starts up and ignored my FSB setting in bios CPU running at default clock 8*200 - i suppose the gigaboards will do that in case of POST failure - but the FSB settings didn't get reset to 200 in bios. i uninstalled the software, upgraded bios (13i with beta support on 45nm), tried again a few times finally i got the beep error during POST, turn computer off n on again now the FSB settings get reset to 200 in bios... i set it up to 8*350 and this time it boot up ok.. i found my antec 500 running quite hot (and the fan never started) and it might retire rather soon.

I'm locking for a new video card (atm 7600gs) and saw this one and was very interested in the cooling solution, but it doesnt have ram coolers, but i have some here at home, they are 6mm (millimeters) high. But I couldn't find any measurements in the net.

do they fit? especially underneath the flat part of the cooler where the headpipes end?

I'm locking for a new video card (atm 7600gs) and saw this one and was very interested in the cooling solution, but it doesnt have ram coolers, but i have some here at home, they are 6mm (millimeters) high. But I couldn't find any measurements in the net.

do they fit? especially underneath the flat part of the cooler where the headpipes end?

i believe you can't attach them on about half the video memory chips.

it doesn't really concern me though, the chips are spec'd for 1000MHz and MSI clocked it only 950MHz. i oc the card to 700 core/1000 memory on first try i didn't even notice any temp increase.

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